Asia stocks climb after upbeat U.S. jobs, euro near nine-year low

Hopes that the European Central Bank will embark upon bolder stimulus after data showing the euro zone had slipped into deflation also shored up riskier assets, which have been hit this week by concerns over tumbling oil prices and global economic weakness.

Wall Street rebounded on Wednesday from five straight sessions of losses after strong U.S. private sector jobs data underscored strength in the world’s largest economy and fanned hopes for a strong reading of the all-important non-farm payrolls due on Friday.

Spreadbetters saw the upward momentum for equities being retained in Europe, forecasting Britain’s FTSE to open up by as much as 1.2 percent and Germany’s DAX and France’s CAX both 1.5 percent higher.

Optimism over more ECB stimulus may have helped equities but the prospect of further central bank easing was detrimental for the euro, which slid to a nine-year low against the dollar.

The common currency fetched $1.1823, within close proximity of $1.1802 hit overnight, its lowest since January 2006.

“At this stage there is very little reason to doubt that euro will test its 2005 low of $1.1639…there is only 15 days to go before the ECB meeting and we expect the currency to remain under pressure until then,” Kathy Lien, managing director for BK Asset Management wrote in a note to clients.

Data released on Wednesday showing prices in the euro zone fell for the first time since 2009 cemented already high expectations that the ECB will embark on a bond buying program at its Jan. 22 meeting.

In contrast, the Federal Reserve is still expected to lift interest rates, although the timing remains unclear. Minutes of the December meeting released on Wednesday offered no new clues on when the Fed will move.

The dollar was better bid against the yen after the rebound in stocks dampened appetite for the safe-haven Japanese currency.

The dollar gained 0.4 percent to 119.70 yen after pulling away from a three-week low of 118.05 hit on Tuesday.

A halt to the recent sharp decline in U.S. Treasury yields also boded well for the dollar.

The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield was at 1.988 percent after dropping to a 12-week low of 1.887 percent on Tuesday.

U.S. crude oil clung to gains after snapping a four-day losing streak overnight that took prices to a 5-1/2-year low earlier in the week.

“Sentiment towards the oil market remains negative but the lack of downward momentum in overnight trading has left bears a little nonplussed,” said Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney.

Aided by an unexpected drop in U.S. crude inventories for last week, U.S. crude was up 29 cents at $48.94 a barrel, while Brent was up 15 cents at $51.30. [O/R] (REUTERS)